26 pages 52 minutes read

Miné Okubo

Citizen 13660

Nonfiction | Graphic Novel/Book | Adult | Published in 1946

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Pages 101-153Chapter Summaries & Analyses

Pages 101-126 Summary

After the Wartime Civil Control Administration issued two center-wide inspections by the US army, it was determined that the conditions of Tanforan Assembly Center warranted moving internees to a more permanent location known as Topaz, the Central Utah Project. Okubo and her brother packed their belongings and boarded a train with the other internees that was to take them to Topaz. The train ride lasted several days, introducing many of the internees to new terrain that they have never seen before.

Pages 127-153 Summary

When Okubo and her brother arrived at Topaz, they were assigned a new barrack and another member to their unit. The camp administrators did not allow two-person family units, so Okubo and her brother decided to invite a lone male university student to their unit. The three of them began working at the Topaz Times, which a newspaper distributed throughout the camp to keep internees informed about the center and the world outside. Camp administration would censor inappropriate content. 

Topaz was only two-thirds of the way constructed, which meant that internees had to take it upon themselves to steal lumber to patch up their barracks to keep themselves warm during the cold nights. When winter came, the camp administration gave internees potbellied stoves to warm themselves.

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